Step Into My Office: Dallas vs. National. What Makes the Market Shine?
Vacancy may be high, but Dallas is far from down. Newmark experts tell CPE's Olivia Bunescu what's reshaping the city’s office market.

Dallas may be known for its sprawling layout, business-friendly climate and good fundamentals, but its office sector tells a more layered story. Whereas the vacancy rate is still lagging and some landlords are rethinking their investment strategies due to underperformance and volatility, some fundamentals still shine.
One segment of the office market is defined by outdated buildings dragging up vacancy, whereas the other is led by high-quality trophy assets drawing strong tenant interest. Financial institutions remain the main tenant base, but investors can find opportunities everywhere if they look at the bigger picture.
In this episode of Step Into My Office, I am joined by Newmark’s Head of SE Research, Ching-ting Wang and Executive Managing Director of Global Research, David Bitner, as we zoom into the market’s performance. Although some fundamentals might pose challenges, office absorption across the metro still performs well, especially in submarkets such as Uptown Turtle Creek and suburban areas. The evolution of workplace strategies, paired with current volatility in the sector, calls for caution, but also optimism.
Most of the time, it’s about perspective, they say. So, what will shape the next chapter of Dallas’ office market and how is it comparable to other markets across the US?
LISTEN TO: Step Into My Office: Inside LA’s Office Market Recalibration
Here’s what we discussed about:
- Vacancy rate highs, but positive absorption(01:39)
- Which submarkets are most resilient? (05:13)
- Is ease of access the new flight-to-quality? (09:36)
- Cost vs quality: what do tenants choose? (12:06)
- What is missing from the office recovery? (15:09)
- Class segmentation and landlord behavior post-pandemic (18:55)
- What’s fueling development in a high-vacancy market? (23:25)
- Suburban areas shine for flex office (25:43)
- Adaptive reuse is still limited to dense CBD zones (27:19)
- Is Dallas a younger version of Los Angeles? (31:09)
- The next chapter for office (35:30)
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Music credit: Sunrise Sprint Office Beats via stocktune.com
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